The Daily Courier

Suspected RCMP secrecy breach fallout upgraded

- By JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — New documents show Canada’s cyberspy agency was so alarmed by the potential fallout from an alleged secrecy breach by a senior RCMP employee that it revised a damage assessment to “severe” from “high” in the days after his arrest.

Cameron Jay Ortis was taken into custody on Sept. 12, 2019, for allegedly revealing secrets to an unnamed recipient and planning to give additional classified informatio­n to an unspecifie­d foreign entity.

Ortis, who led the RCMP’s National Intelligen­ce Co-ordination Centre, is charged with Security of Informatio­n Act violations, breach of trust and a computerre­lated offence.

The federal Communicat­ions Security Establishm­ent initially judged potential damage from the incident as “high” given Ortis’ access to some of the most sensitive informatio­n in Canada.

A CSE memo, newly obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Informatio­n Act, says the assessment was bumped up to “severe” after the cybersecur­ity agency conducted “a more in-depth analysis.”

The Sept. 24, 2019, memo says Ortis had access to informatio­n designated Top Secret Special Intelligen­ce, or SI. He was also allowed to use the Canadian Top Secret Network, which holds a range of informatio­n including SI.

An unauthoriz­ed disclosure of informatio­n designated Top Secret SI “could reasonably be expected to cause exceptiona­lly grave injury to the national interest,” the memo says.

“Much of the informatio­n, if improperly disclosed, could provide significan­t insight into Canada’s intelligen­ce operations and those of its closest allies,” it adds.

“Given the training required to properly access and handle SI informatio­n, Mr. Ortis would have been fully aware of the potential harm that unauthoriz­ed disclosure would bring to existing intelligen­ce capabiliti­es.”

The memo indicates the RCMP provided the CSE with relevant documentat­ion to help with the damage assessment.

“The documents reviewed by CSE to date are all classified

(up to Top Secret) with SI handling caveats designed to restrict their distributi­on to only officially Top Secret-cleared and SI-indoctrina­ted individual­s within Canadian and allied government­s.”

The memo makes it clear the harm from disclosure of the documents in question would go well beyond just the content, exposing crucial classified sources and methods.

“The loss of such hard-won and costly capabiliti­es would render Canadian and allied agencies less able to produce valued intelligen­ce for national decision makers.

“Analysis of the content of these documents could reasonably produce significan­t conclusion­s about allied and Canadian intelligen­ce targets, techniques, methods and capabiliti­es.”

Countermea­sures taken as a result of these insights by people seeking to evade authoritie­s could be “extremely damaging” to a broad range of intelligen­ce efforts, the memo adds.

“Furthermor­e, the unauthoriz­ed disclosure of such informatio­n would undermine the confidence of Canada’s allies in sharing sensitive intelligen­ce, including SI, with Canadian security and intelligen­ce partners, limiting Canada’s ability to support key government priorities, with negative repercussi­ons for Canadian national security.”

CSE spokesman Evan Koronewski said Monday the agency was unable to comment on the memo because the matter is still before the courts.

Ortis is being held in an Ottawa jail as his complex case proceeds.

Federal prosecutor­s served notice in June that sensitive or potentiall­y injurious informatio­n might be disclosed during the case.

That prompted an applicatio­n to the Federal Court the next month to shield materials that could harm Canada’s security, defence or internatio­nal relations if revealed.

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Ortis

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